Pines: Difference between revisions

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==Other names==
==Other names==


The [[Sindarin]] name for a "pine-tree" is '''''thôn'''''.<ref>{{S|Appendix}}</ref><ref>{{HM|RC}}, p. 384 (citing the "[[Unfinished index]]")</ref>
The [[Sindarin]] name for a "pine-tree" is '''''thôn'''''.<ref>{{S|Appendix}}</ref><ref>{{HM|UI}}, p. 384</ref>


In the ''[[The Etymologies|Etymologies]]'', [[Ilkorin]] '''''thōn''''' and [[Noldorin]] '''''thaun''''' (pl. ''thuin''), deriving from root [[THON]],  are said to mean "pine-tree".<ref>{{LR|Etymologies}}, p. 392</ref><ref>{{VT|46a}}, p. 19</ref>
In the ''[[The Etymologies|Etymologies]]'', [[Ilkorin]] '''''thōn''''' and [[Noldorin]] '''''thaun''''' (pl. ''thuin''), deriving from root [[THON]],  are said to mean "pine-tree".<ref>{{LR|Etymologies}}, p. 392</ref><ref>{{VT|46a}}, p. 19</ref>

Latest revision as of 10:15, 21 May 2021

Pines were common evergreen trees, found throughout the lands of Middle-earth, but especially in the highlands of Dorthonion, a land which took its name from the pine trees that grew there.[1]

Other names[edit | edit source]

The Sindarin name for a "pine-tree" is thôn.[2][3]

In the Etymologies, Ilkorin thōn and Noldorin thaun (pl. thuin), deriving from root THON, are said to mean "pine-tree".[4][5]

In Tolkien's very early conception of the Elvish languages (dating from ca. 1917), the Gnomish name for a "pinetree" is aigos and the Qenya name is aikasse.[6]

See also[edit | edit source]

External Link[edit | edit source]

References